The Hills are Alive With the Scent of Whiskey

The High West Saloon, 703 Park Avenue in Old Town Park City, in the renovated National Garage just one block off Historic Main Street offers a seasonal, western-inspired menu, cocktails and tastings. For even deeper immersion, visit the High West Distillery and Tasting Room in nearby Wanship.

My first venture to High West Distillery was a memorable experience, even though I made it nowhere near a shot of whiskey. After a night of heavy snowfall during the Sundance Film Festival, the private road leading to the distilling facility at Blue Star Ranch in Wanship was impassable. These things occasionally happen in this high-mountain, semi-rural landscape.

Today, as I steer my sedan through steep, narrow switchbacks to the top of the hill where the distillery sits, it’s only lightly snowing — the stage is still appropriately set for a wintry tasting. The delay only built my sense of anticipation. Though I’ve been on a handful of brewery tours, this is my first time touring a distillery. I could not ask for a better introduction.​​

I meet Jack, our tour guide, inside the Refectory building — one of High West’s two main buildings, this one housing a tasting room, restaurant and gift shop. Jack gives a little backstory before we begin the tour: When they began distilling in 2007 in Park City, High West was Utah’s first legal distillery since 1870. That location is still the ski-in, flagship Saloon of the High West brand. I’m at the Distillery and Tasting Room in the nearby mountain town of Wanship, opened in 2015.

Inside, we’re teased with the sweet aroma of hundreds of gallons of whiskey and we’re reminded why we’re here

As the High West Distillery tour group is led across the courtyard toward the building that houses the still, I notice it feels more like an alpine resort than an industrial facility — spindly, snow-covered quaking aspens line a small cascading stream between the new, Old West–style buildings. Inside, we’re teased with the sweet aroma of hundreds of gallons of whiskey and we’re reminded why we’re here. Jack leads us past towering stacks of bags of grain upstairs to a row of stainless steel fermentation tanks where he explains the fermentation process and the difference between various types of whiskey.

It’s a lot to take in, but as we circumnavigate the distillery on a steel catwalk, diagrams on the wall provide a visual summary of everything Jack is explaining. One of the reasons High West decided to build the distillery in this particular spot, he says, is because it sits atop the Oyster Ridge aquifer — an ideal source of clean, mineral-rich groundwater perfect for making whiskey. Soon, we’re in the shadow of the hulking giant on the corner: the massive Forsythe copper pot still imported from Scotland. Jack tells us how the hybrid pot still and rectifying column work. Our last stop before actually tasting the whiskey is on a catwalk overlooking the bottling room, where a crew of 12 people are busy bottling, labeling and hand-numbering every bottle of whiskey — averaging 6,500 bottles per day.

Back at the Refectory, I build my own custom whiskey flight. I’ve tried many of High West’s whiskeys, but the bartender guides me toward some new and rare releases. One is Valley Tan, a re-creation of a Brigham Young–era, Utah-produced whiskey. Another is a Barrel Selects variation of High West’s American Prairie Reserve, which is a proprietary blend of sourced bourbons finished in spent barrels from their bottled cocktail called The 36th Vote Barreled Manhattan (named in honor of Utah being the critical 36th state to vote for repealing the 18th amendment and end Prohibition). I’d run through the flavor notes like a whiskey aficionado, but since they poured my sample from the last bottle at the distillery, few others will have the privilege of this particular experience. But the distillery has many more Barrel Selects in the queue. The prospect of getting to taste one-offwhiskieslike this is reason enough to make the drive up the canyon from the Salt Lake Valley more often — the idyllic surroundings don’t hurt, either.

With the tour and tasting complete at one of Utah’s prize winning distilleries, on to the lunch menu. Let me enjoy my elk burger and three-bean poblano chili in peace.

Cody Kirkland

Cody Kirkland is an editorial writer, reviewer & beverage expert with diverse write-ups and features in The New York Times, The Salt Lake Tribune & Fresh Cup, to name a few. Based in Salt Lake City, Utah, he began as a contributor for SLUG Magazine (Salt Lake UnderGround), covering subjects ranging from alien abductees to local business reviews, while writing about festivals from SXSW to Slamdance for various outlets over nearly a decade. Kirkland’s café insights, recipes, classes, cocktail guides, & hospitality tips continue to garner wide interest in the coffee, tea, bitters, & cocktail industries, & beyond. In 2016, Cody’s face was on the cover of U.S. coffee & tea industry rag Fresh Cup. Samples of his work can be found at codykirkland.com.

High West Distillery

Nearby Cities and Experiences

So you've made the decision to ski Park City for a weekend. That decision alone will be rewarded with two resorts that eclipse 9,000 acres of Utah's renowned skiing and riding. But the mountains are only the beginning. See it all here.

Utah’s capital provides all the amenities and events you expect to find in a thriving metro area and the convenience and affordability of a place that hasn’t yet been “discovered” by the masses. And it's only a few minutes from the mountains.